IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.
  • KOSA is designed to protect kids online. Here’s why these kids are banding together against the bill

    05:25
  • What’s at stake if TikTok gets banned

    07:00
  • There are only 200 analog photobooths left in the world. Will they go extinct?

    07:04
  • ‘I’m choosing peace’: Leaving America after the election

    07:25
  • Bankruptcy and biscuits: Red Lobster’s CEO says they’re swimming forward

    05:40
  • I froze my eggs and it wasn’t what I expected

    08:42
  • House Divided: My parents and I are split between Trump and Harris

    04:28
  • Affected by gun violence, these Philly teens are learning how to shoot

    07:58
  • What young voters really think of Trump and Harris

    04:00
  • Trump or Harris? How hip-hop could decide

    03:32
  • How mariachi united this Iowa high school

    05:50
  • Meet the evangelical Christians pushing to address climate change

    06:32
  • Is this Amber alert alternative to find missing Black youth working?

    06:28
  • Is ‘botanical sexism’ the reason why your allergies are worse this year?

    04:08
  • Behind the scenes with Twitch streamer HasanAbi

    08:29
  • Players speak out on NCAA conference realignment

    06:13
  • Why 73% of young voters support an age limit for candidates

    03:49
  • Could ChatGPT write your favorite song? How AI is reshaping music

    05:51
  • Now Playing

    How ‘the most racist county in America’ is reckoning with its past

    08:15
  • UP NEXT

    Music company uses AI to expand access to music education

    04:02

Stay Tuned

How ‘the most racist county in America’ is reckoning with its past

08:15

About 30 miles north of Atlanta lies Forsyth County, Georgia. It’s home to about 270,000 residents who boast about Forsyth’s high-performing public schools and growing diverse communities. But in 1912, it was the site of a brutal racial cleansing that expelled about 1,100 Black residents. Now, a new scholarship is helping descendants of those families reclaim their legacy. In this week’s Stay Tuned we’ll uncover the complex history of Forsyth County rooted in racial violence and injustice, and how its current residents are having a serious reckoning with that past.