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  • The FX TV show "Fargo" will air its Season 2 finale Monday night. NPR's TV critic Eric Deggans weighs in on how the show has garnered such success.
  • As the story goes, pardoning a turkey dates back to President Lincoln, when his young son Tad begged his father to let the White House Thanksgiving meal live. On Wednesday, Obama pardons Cobbler and Gobbler.
  • Polygamy is fairly common in Kenya but one forthcoming marriage is turning that custom on its head. A Kenyan woman not wanting to choose between the two men she loves, decided she will marry both of them. The men have agreed, and the trio even signed a contract to "set boundaries and keep the peace."
  • Farai Chideya concludes her two-part conversation with author Tananarive Due. Due talks about the inspiration for her civil rights memoir Freedom in the Family, which she co-authored with her mother.
  • In the second of two reports on the reinvention of the nursing home, NPR's Joseph Shapiro visits Tupelo, Miss., to see if the way a nursing home looks can change the way people live. The experiment is based on a concept called the Green House Project.
  • Protests in Iran continued Thursday as demonstrators wore black to mourn those killed in clashes throughout the week. An Iranian-American researcher in Tehran, who is a supporter of presidential challenger Mir Hossein Mousavi, says protesters are using the language and cultural traditions of the Islamic Republic to argue for their rights.
  • NPR's Jordana Hochman is travelling through Liberia and is sending in dispatches from her trip. Today, the lasting tension between native Liberians and the Americo-Liberians, those descended from freed slaves who settled there in the 19th century.
  • A lot has changed in the month since the first Republican presidential debate — perhaps most notably the number of Republican rivals willing to attack Donald Trump.
  • We explore the coronavirus pandemic response in the United States from a public health perspective with Dr. Marissa Levine, Professor of Public Health Practice and Family Medicine in the University of South Florida College of Public Health, where she focuses on population health improvement and teaches leadership.
  • We explore the coronavirus pandemic response in the United States from a public health perspective with Dr. Marissa Levine, Professor of Public Health Practice and Family Medicine in the University of South Florida College of Public Health, where she focuses on population health improvement and teaches leadership.
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