Tesla boycotts, Bud Light boycotts, corporations boycotting states — are these examples of freedom of speech or something else? The moral quandary of market activism. Plus, a Valley-based author’s book about a high schooler with Tourette syndrome.
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South of the border, in the Mexican state of Sonora, the city of Hermosillo is dealing with ongoing water shortage and the various ways it impacts all walks of life. KJZZ’s Nina Kravinsky recently reported an illuminating series of stories about how drought is shaping life there, and joined The Show to discuss.
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A “Crime Free Lease Addendum" is intended to make apartment complexes safer and prevent crime from happening there. But a new investigation found they’re not really having the desired effect.
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Tesla protests have been gathering at facilities around the Valley. A few years back, conservatives began boycotting Bud Lite. Both of these protests may be considered effective, but were they moral?
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Summer always comes earlier than we’d like it to here in Phoenix. But there are some benefits to that. For example, we get a jumpstart on building our summer reading lists.
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One of the Guggenheim Foundation's fellows is ASU professor Larissa Fasthorse, who is planning to use her fellowship to create a theatrical adaptation of one of the first English-language novels, "Oroonoko."
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"The Beat I Drum" tells the story of Connor Bradley, who is starting a new high school, has recently moved into a new part of town and is dealing with his father. Also, Bradley has Tourette syndrome.