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  • The WGCU-FM news team has won 11 awards in the Florida Associated Press Broadcasters Awards competition for its work in 2018. First and second place will…
  • The Radio Television Digital News Association has awarded the WGCU News team five Edward R. Murrow regional Awards. WGCU competes in RTDNA Region 13,…
  • In July, Republican members of both houses of Congress voted to rescind about $1.1 billion in funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting — along with nearly $8 billion for a variety of foreign aid programs. Stations in Florida also lost state funding when Governor Ron DeSantis vetoed funding for Public Broadcasting in the 2025-2026 budget. To get a sense of how these cuts could impact operations at the station we sit down with WGCU General Mager, Corey Lewis.
  • The WGCU News team won 11 awards in the Florida Associated Press Broadcasters Awards competition for its work in 2018, topping last year's total of 10.The…
  • Beginning this Sunday, Oct. 5 at 5am WGCU will begin airing a weekly interview show called “What’s Health Got to Do With It?” that explores the intersection of healthcare and daily life with a focus on guiding listeners on their journeys through the increasingly convoluted medical bureaucracy. We meet its host, Dr. Joe Sirven. He’s a practicing neurologist, and professor of neurology and Chairman Emeritus of the Department of Neurology at the Mayo Clinic in Arizona. He's also a well-published author on epilepsy, a former editor-in-chief of epilepsy.com, and he currently serves as the editor-in-chief of Brain & Life en Español.
  • Jeremy Hobson hosts second of four-part "The Middle" radio show at WGCU on Oct. 26, 2022
  • The press association promised to improve diversity and other factors. NBC said it hopes to see enough change to run the show in 2023.
  • Author Beth Macy details opioids' odyssey from medicine to scourge, in her book about young heroin users, their long-suffering parents, doctors, drug company executives, cops, judges and drug dealers.
  • NPR's Jordana Hochman will be spending the next few weeks travelling through Liberia, and is trying to learn how the country is recovering from 14 years of political instability and violence.
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