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Measles Is A Killer: It Took 145,000 Lives Worldwide Last Year
The uproar over the U.S. outbreak glosses over a bigger problem: Measles takes a tragic toll in poor countries. But a vaccine can effectively stop this deadly — and highly contagious — disease.
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3:55
Why Do We Love Football So Much? Theater Tackles Tough Questions
A play based on interviews with former NFL players, their families and fans digs deep: What's so fun about a sport that devastates bodies and brains? And what if it can't be made safer?
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3:56
In A Few Fateful Years, One Record Label Blew Open The Blues
Music was an afterthought for Paramount Records, a short-lived label founded by a furniture company. But in its final years, it gave vital exposure to the artists who would come to define Delta blues.
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8:02
In Super Bowl This Sunday, Don't Forget The Guys Behind The Superstars
We know all about the stars playing in Sunday's Super Bowl: Tom Brady and Richard Sherman, to name two. But there are lesser-known players and positions whose roles are just as essential.
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3:34
DEA Using License Plate Readers To Spy On Drivers
The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration has been tracking the movement of vehicles around the U.S. and storing that information. NPR's Arun Rath speaks with Wall Street Journal reporter Devlin Barrett.
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4:11
Former Basketball Player Scores As A Filmmaker
While Deon Taylor was playing professional basketball in Germany, he had an epiphany: he wanted to make movies. The self-taught director's latest film, Supremacy, was released this Friday.
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5:57
Court Awards Sly Stone $5 Million In Lost Royalties
Singer Sly Stone has been awarded $5 million in damages and lost royalties. He claimed his manager and lawyer didn't pay him royalties between 1989 and 2000.
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1:13
The Ol' Puzzle Switcheroo
Every answer is a made-up two-word phrase, where the second and third letters of the first word are switched to get the second word.
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6:37
Are Danes Really That Happy? The Myth Of The Scandinavian Utopia
Are the Nordic countries really the utopias they're cracked up to be? NPR's Rachel Martin speaks with Michael Booth about his new book that attempts to answer that question.
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5:23
From The Ivy League To 'The X-Files': David Duchovny's Big Break
Before he became Fox Mulder, Duchovny was working on his Ph.D. in literature at Yale. He was going to be a poet — or maybe a novelist — or maybe a playwright ...
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4:27
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