"Smart gun" innovators want to make guns harder to accidentally set off Can technological innovation offer better solutions to gun violence in the absence of major political reform? Gun safety innovators are looking for grants and developing "smart guns."
The sale of 2 Spanish talk radio stations may counter the spread of disinformation Miami's Cuban-American community and some Republican officials are in turmoil over the proposed sale of two Spanish-language radio stations to a Latina-owned network backed by George Soros. Greg Allen
Oil price fluctuation can hurt or help in Texas, depending on who you are Oil prices have fallen from their peak earlier this year, but they are still high enough to inflict pain on car owners and to bring big profits to oil producers. Wade Goodwyn
Why did Elon Musk want Twitter in the first place? Ayesha Rascoe speaks with business journalist Felix Salmon about the dispute between Elon Musk and Twitter now that the billionaire entrepreneur is backing away from buying the company. Ayesha Rascoe
The pandemic pushed people to reevaluate their jobs. Meet 5 who reinvented themselves Morning Edition spoke with people who changed their jobs and transformed their lives as a result of the pandemic, from a Broadway actor who entered the tech world to a mom who set more boundaries. Rachel Treisman
Twitter says it will take Elon Musk to court over cancelled purchase of the company Elon Musk's battle with Twitter escalates after the billionaire Tesla CEO said he was calling off his $44 billion purchase agreement. Shannon Bond
The Las Vegas Raiders have hired the first Black female team president in the NFL Sandra Douglass Morgan is a Las Vegas native and graduate of Eldorado High School; the University of Nevada, Reno; and the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Ayana Archie
For first AHL female coach, ‘Hockey is hockey. We speak the same language.’ ‘To me, at the end of the day, coaching is communication. It's about caring about your players and making sure you're doing everything to make them successful.’ Kim Malcolm
The jobs market still favors workers, despite fears of an economic slowdown It's still a worker's job market, with 11.3 million open jobs at the end of May, according to new data from the Labor Department. Jacqueline GaNun
From blockbuster to bust: Behind the precipitous drop in IPOs Private companies are sitting on the sidelines in 2022 after a record setting year of initial public offerings fueled by cheap borrowing. David Gura