Noah Caldwell
Stories
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From rapid development to trade wars: What it's like to cover China?
In our latest Reporter's Notebook segment, John Ruwitch discusses what it's like to report on China, which has undergone immense change in the two decades he's been covering it.
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Audio documentary: A woman losing her vision to HIV/AIDS shares memories with her son
Producer Vivien Schütz presents the story of Gina Velasquez, who progressively lost her vision due to an HIV/AIDS diagnosis decades ago.
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America's air traffic control problem
David Grizzle, the Chief Operating Officer and head of air traffic control for the FAA during the Obama administration, talks about current air traffic issues.
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Lifting the curtain on the conclave with author Robert Harris
As the world waits for the papal conclave to get underway, Scott Detrow speaks with Robert Harris, the author who dramatized the process in the book Conclave.
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What's it like to cover the war in Ukraine? NPR's Kyiv correspondent explains.
Just this week, the Trump administration signed a deal to share revenues from Ukraine's mineral wealth. But how are Ukrainians responding - and what's it like to cover the ongoing conflict?
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From pants to bovine excision, Samia considers the void
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Samia about her new album, Bloodless, and the inspiration she took from contemplating nothingness.
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OK Go reflects on 20 years in the churn of video virality
Damian Kulash of OK Go reflects on the band's decades of creating elaborate one-take viral music videos.
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The biggest plot twist in a viral 'true crime' story? None of it was real
A viral "true crime" story was actually made up, generated by A.I. Reporter Henry Larson explores the ethical questions raised by this new frontier of content.
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More than a decade later, OK Go is back with a new album
The new album from OK Go, called And The Adjacent Possible, is the band's first in more than a decade.
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Reporter's Notebook: on federal judges and the Trump administration
NPR's Ryan Lucas speaks about his beat covering the federal judiciary during the tumult of the second Trump administration.