John Ketchum
Stories
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Artificial Intelligence Setting All Airfares? That future might not be far off
Delta airlines says it wants to use AI to price 20 percent of all domestic fares. Lawmakers and consumers alike have concerns about the implications of the company's policy when it comes to privacy and consumer protection.
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Breonna Taylor's family lawyer speaks about ex-police officer's sentencing
NPR's Ari Shapiro speaks with civil rights attorney Benjamin Crump about the sentencing of a former police officer involved in the raid that killed Breonna Taylor.
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An AI imposter is pretending to be Marco Rubio
An AI imposter is making calls to officials. Who is the AI imposter impersonating? United States Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
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SCOTUS says Parents can opt kids out of lessons with LGBTQ+ characters. What's next?
NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Stanford law professor Jeffrey Fisher about the Supreme Court ruling that parents have the right to remove their kids from class when books with LGBTQ+ themes are used.
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What's Next For Belarus' Opposition party after Siarhei Tsikhanouski's Release
Siarhei Tsikhanouski, Belarus' key opposition figure, is free after spending nearly five years in jail. His wife, Sviatlena , talks about taking up her husband's mantle after his imprisonment.
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Remembering R&B singer Cavin Yarbrough
One of the leading voices of early 1980s R&B, Cavin Yarbrough, of the singing duo Yarbrough and Peoples, passed away at the age of 71.
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This physician left her job to make 'teaching kitchens' for those in need
After working as an emergency medicine physician in Kansas City for years, Kathryn Miner started exploring other ways to help people in her community and pursued lifestyle and culinary medicine.
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U.S. military strategy on Iran
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with retired Air Force Lt. Gen. Dave Deptula about the military planning underway in the U.S. amid the Israel-Iran conflict.
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Unpacking the $10 billion sale of the LA Lakers
The Los Angeles Lakers announced that the team will be sold for $10 billion. Author and historian Jeff Pearlman explains what this means for the franchise and the sport of basketball.
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Why a group of women athletes is appealing the NCAA's landmark antitrust case
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Kate Johnson from the University of Virginia women's volleyball team about how the NCAA's plan to backpay college athletes could lead to pay inequity.