Dumped: Nursing home evictions a reality for some poor patients
14:03
Losing our religion: Finding meaning beyond the pew
09:58
Army divers go deep In Puget Sound to target lost fishing nets
05:00
Climate change: How did we get here?
01:52
Why the Hawaii telescope protests aren’t going anywhere
10:20
Detoxing in jail: Treating opioid use behind bars
09:31
A different kind of force—Policing mental illness: Part 1
37:13
A different kind of force—Policing mental illness: Part 2
30:10
Escaping burnout: Using meditation to set a different course
07:26
Tackling America's loneliness epidemic
10:22
"Don't ask, don't tell" veteran becomes first Stonewall park ranger
10:01
The real reason doctors burn out
13:49
Hurricane-hit Florida Panhandle awaits aid as wildfire risk looms
06:51
New York bodegas unite to bankrupt the New York Post
09:24
Abortion back-up plan: Some women are ordering abortion pills online
13:08
Battling the tech addiction that hijacked our brains
11:15
Exploring new slang: What is 'zaddy'?
02:52
Exploring new slang: What is 'gekyume'?
03:15
Should life be this stressful?
08:39
Exploring new slang: What is 'blockchain'?
03:03
leftfield
From Wall Street to Brooklyn Wordsmith: Leaving the 9-5 for Art's Sake
04:45
Copied
How does it feel to want to be something your family just doesn't understand? For some first-generation millennials, their parents' vision of the American Dream is the doctor, the lawyer, the banker—a steady career that validates their own migration to the U.S. It takes a lot to say no to that, and Latasha Alcinor aka L.A.—a Brooklyn rapper who left her finance career to pursue art full-time—is one them. She, with a collective of first-generation Americans in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, are coming together to inspire and elevate each others' creative pursuits, and bring their families with them.Oct. 18, 2017