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Lynsea Garrison
Alaska grown radio journalist for The Daily, formerly . Tips and stories: [email protected]. RTs are not endorsements.
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Użytkownik Lynsea Garrison podał dalej
Michael Barbaro 18 kwi
On today’s Daily: The Abortion Wars, Part 2. As nearby states seek to restrict abortion, Illinois is trying to protect it. We spent a day with three women at a clinic there. The final installment of a powerful series from and :
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Użytkownik Lynsea Garrison podał dalej
Sabrina Tavernise 17 kwi
New math on the Supreme Court is shifting the balance of abortion in America. What it looks like on the ground in a state where it's nearly gone. With the great and The Abortion Wars, Part 1: The Last Clinic in Missouri
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Użytkownik Lynsea Garrison podał dalej
Sabrina Tavernise 20 gru
Claire McCaskill to progressives who want her louder on abortion: "Shut up!" On the Daily, she reflects on Losing Missouri and the Politics of Purity with and
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Użytkownik Lynsea Garrison podał dalej
Annie Correal 24 sie
Our second episode on The Daily features something from the family separations story you may not have heard: the children’s voices. With ⁦⁩, produced by ⁦⁩ and ⁦⁩.
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Lynsea Garrison 19 sie
Actually 1 minute just to be safe
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Użytkownik Lynsea Garrison podał dalej
Sam Dolnick 26 lip
This article did a great job toasting ⁦⁩ but didn’t give nearly enough credit to Lisa Tobin, the creator of The Daily and the captain of the show. She is a genius and her team of producers are the most talented journalists around.
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Użytkownik Lynsea Garrison podał dalej
Benjamin Weiser 13 cze
“They just might not like Nook today.” Highly recommend "Charm City," a powerful and thought-provoking podcast by & about a Baltimore teenager who was “swallowed by the street.” A triumph of narrative journalism, on the level of S-Town
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Użytkownik Lynsea Garrison podał dalej
Wyatt Gordon 10 cze 2018
Great reporting by , , for ’ 5-part series on . Wonderful interweaving of the complicated conflict between the police and the people over multiple generations.
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Użytkownik Lynsea Garrison podał dalej
Michael Barbaro 9 cze 2018
CHARM CITY: all 5 episodes and tons of photos, all collected here. Take a look:
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Lynsea Garrison 9 cze 2018
Thank you for listening!!
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Użytkownik Lynsea Garrison podał dalej
Sabrina Tavernise 8 cze 2018
Manufacturing in Baltimore went from 34% of jobs in 1950 to 8% by 1995
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Użytkownik Lynsea Garrison podał dalej
Virginia Heffernan 9 cze 2018
This is the best podcast on the Internet air right now. Every moment is a revelation. Thank you, for that alto fury and relentless reporting.
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Użytkownik Lynsea Garrison podał dalej
Kristen Hernandez 9 cze 2018
This was the best, most eye-opening and thought-provoking audio storytelling series I’ve ever listened to. It’s really well done and I highly recommend listening!
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Użytkownik Lynsea Garrison podał dalej
Jessica Lussenhop 8 cze 2018
In my opinion this series, by the brilliant and , isn't really about police corruption, it's a portrait of grief. One family's, a whole city's. Every moment is worth your time:
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Użytkownik Lynsea Garrison podał dalej
Sabrina Tavernise 4 cze 2018
Please listen to our story of one family in Baltimore and their search for answers about the death of their son.
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Użytkownik Lynsea Garrison podał dalej
David Botti 18 lut 2018
W odpowiedzi do @bottidavid
7/7 War brings isolation in many forms: physical and mental. Some are widely chronicled. But there's stories we’ll never know of those killed alone; separated from their units in deserts, mountains and jungles. That’s what’s different about Niger. We witness this final solitude.
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Użytkownik Lynsea Garrison podał dalej
David Botti 18 lut 2018
W odpowiedzi do @bottidavid
6/7 From the piece: “Sgt Wright and Sgt Johnson begin sprinting flat out. The militants are almost on top of them…[Johnson] is hit and goes down...Sgt Wright stops running, turns and fires at the militants from behind a bush...But there’s only so much one soldier can do.”
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Użytkownik Lynsea Garrison podał dalej
David Botti 18 lut 2018
W odpowiedzi do @bottidavid
5/7 With each each moment there’s hard decisions to make, with fewer comrades to help make them and less time to think. Then, it seems, there is only one thing to do: run.
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Użytkownik Lynsea Garrison podał dalej
David Botti 18 lut 2018
W odpowiedzi do @bottidavid
4/7 We still don’t have a full picture of the ambush. But we do know that in one area, as the ambush progressed, isolation crept in: from 11 U.S. soldiers to 3, to 2, to 1. They keep fighting. One less friend, one less weapon, one less pair of eyes and ears.
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Użytkownik Lynsea Garrison podał dalej
David Botti 18 lut 2018
W odpowiedzi do @bottidavid
3/7 There have always been soldiers who’ve died alone in war. But we rarely know the stories of those final moments. Maybe we learn some details from a distant observer – like someone in a WWI trench hearing wounded cry out in “no man’s land.” The picture is never complete.
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