The Brutalist Report - npr
- Boeing will pay $200 million to settle SEC charges over 737 Max crashes [1017d]
- CNN says Iran's president tried to make a hijab a condition for Amanpour interview [1018d]
- Alex Jones testifies over damages he must pay families for Sandy Hook hoax claims [1018d]
- 'Fat Leonard,' a fugitive in a massive Navy bribery case, has been caught in Venezuela [1018d]
- House GOP unveils its legislative roadmap if they win back the House in November [1018d]
- Your beer needs carbon dioxide, but the price skyrocketed over the summer [1018d]
- In Puerto Rico, rescuers struggle to reach areas cut off by Hurricane Fiona [1018d]
- An ex-director of Mississippi's welfare agency pleads guilty over misspent money [1018d]
- Workers are changing jobs and getting raises, and still struggling financially [1018d]
- McDonald's reopens in Ukraine, feeding customers' nostalgia — and future hopes [1018d]
- 32 pilot whales have been rescued out of 230 stranded in Tasmania [1018d]
- In a retaken border village, Ukrainians point to signs of Russian abuse of civilians [1018d]
- A judge blocks the Indiana abortion ban a week after it took effect [1018d]
- Where the Colorado River crisis is hitting home [1018d]
- Over 1 million Teslas are recalled because the windows can pinch fingers [1018d]
- A truck collision turns a Florida highway into a silver sea of beer cans [1018d]
- Facing setbacks, Vladimir Putin makes his biggest gamble yet in Ukraine [1018d]
- The first day of fall marks the autumn equinox, which is different from a solstice [1018d]
- Twitch bans some gambling content after an outcry from streamers [1018d]
- Saeed Jones confronts the end of the world in new poems [1018d]
- Tired of Saturn's rings? Check out NASA's latest image of the bands around Neptune [1018d]
- Please don't cook chicken in NyQuil, the FDA asks TikTok users [1018d]
- With 'Ducks,' the creator of Hark! A Vagrant reveals her shadow side [1018d]
- A 6.8 magnitude earthquake shakes Mexico and leaves 1 dead [1018d]
- An appeals court rules the Justice Dept. can use Mar-a-Lago records in criminal probe [1018d]
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