EXPLORE MORE
Monday on BPR:
Harvard’s Juliette Kayyem
ACLU of Massachuetts' Carol Rose
Michael Curry from the Mass League of Community Health Centers
David Shapiro, YMCA of Greater Boston
James Beard-award winning Chef and author Alexander Smalls
Recent segments
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                    Kellogg's To Phase Out Herbicide Found In It's Ingredient Supply ChainFarmers rely on glyphosate for their crops, but Kellogg's is suggesting that trace amounts of it found in their ingredients are unsafe.
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                    Callie Crossley Isn’t Buying The Update To Florida's Felon Voting Rights AmendmentThe “Under the Radar” host compared the updated law to the poll taxes of the pre-civil rights era.
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                    Emily Rooney: Will Kobe's Death Change Helicopter Regulations?Rooney pointed out similarities between the Kobe Bryant tragedy and Stephen Colbert's family.
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                    Ezra Klein On The Roots Of America's Political PolarizationIn Ezra Klein’s book “Why We’re Polarized,” he explores the reasons and history behind America's political divisions.
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                    Paul Reville On Harvard Professor Charged With Lying To F.B.I: ‘Clearly He’s Crossed The Boundaries'The former Mass. Education Secretary said he expects a more severe response from the university once an internal investigation is concluded.
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                    Cabral: Dershowitz Is 'A Harvard Professor Making A Trump University Argument'On Wednesday, Dershowitz said that advanced a controversial legal theory in which he claimed a president could invite electoral interference from a foreign power to aid them because it would be in the public interest.
Listen to previous shows
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                      Full Broadcast 10/23/18The full broadcast of Boston Public Radio from Tuesday, October 23rd, 2018. Donald Trump has gone from calling Ted Cruz a liar and accusing his father of helping assassinate JFK during the campaign to praising him now during the midterms. Despite Trump's previous comments, Ted Cruz has not hesitated to take his endorsement. We opened the lines to hear if you have ever had to accept help from someone who has publicly humiliated you. NBC Sports Boston's Trenni Kusnierek previewed game one of the world series and the Red Sox's legacy. Frontline's Martin Smith discussed his new documentary, The Pension Gamble. Food Critic Corby Kummer joined us to talk about how major tuna companies became involved in a tuna price fixing scheme. We opened the lines asked you what you would do if you won the lottery. CNN's John King called in to talk about the top political headlines. Film critic Bob Thompson gave us his list of the best and worst shows on TV.
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                      Full Broadcast 10/22/18The full broadcast of Boston Public Radio from Monday, October 22nd, 2018
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                      Corby Kummer | Climate Change Could Raise The Price Of BeerFood critic Corby Kummer joined Boston Public Radio to talk about a study that says climate change could cause the price of beer to rise.
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                      Full Broadcast 10/19/18The full broadcast of Boston Public Radio from Friday, October 19th, 2018.
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                      Full Broadcast 10/18/18The full broadcast of Boston Public Radio from Thursday, October 18th, 2018. Will former deputy DNC chair and Minnesota congressman Keith Ellison lose his bid for Minnesota attorney general due to allegations of dishonesty, infidelity and emotional abuse by an ex-girlfriend? We discuss with New York Times reporter Farah Stockman. If you missed last night's gubernatorial debate with incumbent Charlie Baker and his challenger Jay Gonzalez, we caught you up and got your take on Baker’s stance on U.S. Senate candidate Geoff Diehl, who Baker first waffled on and then said he would vote for in a post-debate media scrum. Then, don’t mess with Texas. Getting schooled on how to interact with police is now a high school graduation requirement for teens in the Lonestar state — former sheriff and Mass. Secretary of Public Safety Andrea Cabral joins us for that and more on this week’s edition of Law and Order. Then, a break from the doom and gloom with a more uplifting topic — all about the transcendent powers of music with Mark Volpe, president and chief executive officer of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, and BSO’s Artistic Administrator Tony Fogg. Then, it’s Harvard on trial. Former Secretary of Education Paul Reville joins us to talk about claims that the university’s admissions policies discriminate against Asian-American applicants. Boston Globe Columnist Alex Beam joins us for his famous explainer — and why he’s mad at millennials for “killing” American cheese.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
